Los Gatos Weekly Times

Salmon return to creeks in Bay Area

Heavy October rain triggers rush of breeding by Chinook; more fish await their chance

- By Lisa M. Krieger lkrieger@ bayareanew­sgroup.com

Autumnal rain has sent a surge of Chinook salmon swimming up Bay Area creeks, a sharp reversal in fortune for an iconic species that has struggled after years of drought.

A living link between our mountains and coast, the fish responded to late October’s fierce atmospheri­c river by rushing up the region’s once-parched rivers, say biologists, frequentin­g spots where they’ve never been seen.

“It’s remarkable,” said Joe Sullivan, fishery manager with the East Bay Regional Park District. The storm “triggered them to go to the first slug of fresh water they could find” as they returned from their epic ocean migration to spawn.

In recent years, population­s of Chinook, also known as king salmon, have collapsed with astonishin­g speed — and even this current run is unlikely to end well if more rain doesn’t come.

But it’s a heartening sign that the huge fish are still yearning to breed in our waters.

The salmon were presumed to be gone for good from Hayward’s San Lorenzo Creek. But dozens have been spotted swimming in the creek’s urban flood control channel. In the South Bay, others have made it up Los Gatos Creek, as far as Campbell.

Last year, only one fish was reported in lower Alameda Creek. Now there are many, trapped in a small pool created by a concrete barrier near BART piers.

And for the first time in recorded history, National Park Service biologists documented a female Chinook on a gravel nest in Marin County’s Olema Creek, which flows through Point Reyes Station to Tomales Bay. Nearby, also for the first time, a pair of salmon were seen swimming in Bolinas’ tiny Pine Gulch Creek.

A newly restored stretch of San Geronimo Creek received a historic rainfall of 10 inches in a 24-hour period — and within three days, chinook salmon were swimming through the riffles and milling about in pools, according to Turtle Island Restoratio­n Network. In Sonoma County, fish swam from San Pablo Bay up to Sonoma Creek.

The fall-run Chinook is the most highly prized species of Pacific wild salmon.

They’re powerful and red-hued, with black spots on their back. Weighing up to 30 pounds, the fish are born in fresh water and then adapt to saltwater during a mass migration out into the Pacific Ocean, where they live for three years. Then they swim to freshwater rivers to spawn and die.

“Big and beautiful,” Sullivan said. “That’s the best way I can say it.”

The Chinook seen in Santa Clara and Alameda counties were likely born in Central Valley hatcheries, or are descendant­s of hatchery-born fish, then were introduced into the bay, said Jeff Miller of the Alameda Creek Alliance.

In contrast, the fish in coastal Marin, San Mateo and Santa Cruz rivers were born in wild waters.

Every October and November, when streams cool down, they move up from the ocean into the estuaries and the bay, waiting for storms, according to Jerry Smith, fish expert and retired professor of biological sciences at San Jose State University.

Historical­ly, Chinook were abundant. But manmade migrationa­l barriers, such as dams, have reduced their numbers. There’s been pollution and poaching. The recent droughts were exceptiona­lly punishing, turning rivers warm and dry.

Compared to other salmon, Chinook have an advantage, Miller said. The baby fish can swim safely to the ocean in the spring — so don’t perish in desiccated rivers.

But recent winter’s flows have been too low, or too late, to welcome the adults

back for breeding. In the South Bay’s Guadalupe River watershed, which hosts the nation’s most southern salmon runs, the draining of Anderson Dam for a seismic retrofit project meant that no water was released for fish, according to Steve Holmes, founder and executive director of the South Bay Clean Creeks Coalition.

In the 1990s, at least 2,000 fish were counted

coming up into San Jose’s Guadalupe River watershed, Holmes said. In recent years, on average, only 150 to 200 fish were seen. In Fremont’s lower Alameda Creek, the last notable year was 2006, when a handful was spotted. Only one was seen in 2012, then another in 2018. Two were seen in 2019.

But this year’s major storm on Oct. 24 changed everything.

For humans, that atmospheri­c river was perilous. A concentrat­ed plume of moisture pummeled the Bay Area with rain and high winds, felling trees and stalling cars.

For the fish, however, it was a godsend — perfectly timed for their courtship rituals.

“All the fish were waiting for water and lower temperatur­es,” Holmes said. “So when that atmospheri­c storm hit and flows increased, they started moving up.”

It was brief, he added. In a two- or three-day window, some made it far. But most others, lagging behind them, are still waiting.

Hopes are now pinned on the right parade of storms. Each one could trigger a big pulse of water, said biologists, offering additional fish a safe route up to spawning grounds.

“If the flows are right, and the fish are in the right place on the river, they’ll just sort of hopscotch up,” Holmes said.

But if the storms don’t arrive, those pools will shrink — and today’s abundant Chinook will be trapped in tomorrow’s stagnant water.

“We’ve had one good storm, but the majority of the fish are still in the bay, waiting,” Holmes said. “We really need more.”

Help count the fish

Alameda County: If you see fish in the lower Alameda Creek Flood Control Channel that you believe to be salmon or steelhead, from November through April, please contact Jeff Miller, Alameda Creek Alliance, jeff@ alamedacre­ek. org.

 ?? COURTESY OF DAN SARKA, ALAMEDA CREEK ALLIANCE ?? The recent storm triggered the migration of Chinook salmon into lower Alameda Creek in Fremont. They are blocked from moving upstream by a cement weir, but constructi­on of a fish migration ladder is nearing completion.
COURTESY OF DAN SARKA, ALAMEDA CREEK ALLIANCE The recent storm triggered the migration of Chinook salmon into lower Alameda Creek in Fremont. They are blocked from moving upstream by a cement weir, but constructi­on of a fish migration ladder is nearing completion.
 ?? COURTESY OF MIKE TAMARO, SOUTH BAY CLEAN CREEKS COALITION ?? With winter rain, Chinook Salmon moved up to spawn in Los Gatos Creek, then die.
COURTESY OF MIKE TAMARO, SOUTH BAY CLEAN CREEKS COALITION With winter rain, Chinook Salmon moved up to spawn in Los Gatos Creek, then die.

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